Book
1 3 | the ears of corn~bending down, and the lion's eyebrows,
2 5 | another, is ready to set it~down to his account as a favour
3 5 | Rain, rain, O dear Zeus, down on the~ploughed fields of
4 6 | so that thy thoughts come down even to~Philistion and Phoebus
5 7 | seen. Everywhere up and down thou wilt find~the same
6 8 | or harm for it to~come down, or even to have fallen?
7 8 | sun appears to be poured down, and in all directions indeed
8 8 | in its~way; nor yet fall down, but be fixed and enlighten
9 9 | up it is no evil to come down,~nor indeed any good to
10 9 | universe are the same, up and down~from age to age. And either
11 9 | indolence and pride.~ Look down from above on the countless
12 10| Again, the child passes food down through the throat,~and
13 10| downwards, as a cylinder down an inclined surface,~and
14 10| then the wind casts them down; then~the forest produces
15 11| introduced, which~gradually sunk down into a mere mimic artifice.
16 11| nor~dispersed nor sinks down, but is illuminated by light,
17 11| strangers, but themselves sat down anywhere.~ Socrates excused
18 11| wilt thou be able to lay down~rules for others before
19 12| earth, and shouldst look down~on human things, and observe
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